Columbus East High School - Altis Yearbook (Columbus, IN)

 - Class of 1980

Page 24 of 240

 

Columbus East High School - Altis Yearbook (Columbus, IN) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 24 of 240
Page 24 of 240



Columbus East High School - Altis Yearbook (Columbus, IN) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 23
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Page 24 text:

US Olympics Athletes Dazzle the World Ice Couldn't Hold Them Anymore In 1980: The Olympic year. As the year progressed, the hope of a peaceful Olympic tournament faded dimmer and dimmer. After the Soviet Union's invasion of Af- ghanistan in early January, Presi- dent Carter proposed a boycott to the United States Summer Olympics Committee. After months of fettering back and forth, the committee supported the President's request and de- cided to boycott the Moscow Games, leaving many American athletes stripped of their life-long dream. Bringing home her third silver medal in speed skating, Leah Mueller said, I like silver, after capturing the second place in the 1,000 meter speed skating event. She had won two silver medals in the 1976 Olympics. In the final weeks before the Olympics, the brother-sister Hei- den team, Eric and Beth, set up a training center at one of the world's fastest speed skating rinks in Davos, Switzerland. The Hei- dens drew knowing and admiring crowds. As reported a Dutch fa- ther said, I tell my son, look at them. Look at the Heidens, so you can say you have seen the best. And the best he was. As 21- year-old Eric listened to the na- tional anthem played in his honor five times, Americans cherished the memories of watching him in the lightning fast 500-meter sprint, through the middle distances of 1,000 and 1,500 meters and on to the grueling 5,000 and 10,000 me- ter endurance race. Eric Heiden has been called one of the greatest Olympians ever, and understandably so. He is the first and only American to ever have won five gold medals in individual events. Eric describes his golden zest, Sometimes when I'm racing and I'm really stroking strong, I can feel the ice breaking away beneath me. It is wonderful feeling, because it means I have reached the limit, the ice can't hold me anymore. However, in the darkness shines the glimmering stars who brought Americans to their feet chanting USA! USA! Americans proudly expected golden boy Eric Heiden to win his five gold med- als, but the US Hockey team made everyone believers in the youngest hockey team to com- pete in the Olympics. For the Lake Placid Games, the US Olympic hockey team de- cided to get its act together and take it on the road. The summer preceeding the Games, a 26-man team was culled from this coun- try's hockey hotbed. Sixteen from Minnesota, six from Massachu- setts, two from Michigan and two from Wisconsin set off on a 61- game schedule where they fin- ished 41-15-3. Coach Herb Brooks' team was labeled as a long shot who just might sur- prise its audience. ' Whether the audience was surprised or not, the other hockey squads from across the globe sure were. Our US hockey team went undefeated to capture the first gold medal in the event since the 1960 stunning upset at the Squaw Valley Games. The US squad, made up of several guys just out of high school, was the youngest hockey team ever to enter the Olympic hockey event. During the span of the two- week Olympic games, 19-year- old Beth Heiden brought home a bronze in the 3,000 meter speed skating event. She was not the only disappointed Olympian searching for the gold, as figure skater Linda Fratianne had to settle for the silver in an event she hoped for gold. Linda gave per- fect dazzling performances assur- ing her of professional skating of- fers. Randy Gardner and Tai Babi- lonia were denied the gold in pairs figure skating competition, but only because of a leg injury suffered by Gardner during prac- tice. Randy and Tai shared a sad ending to four years of dedication to the golden dream. Quotes from Time, Newsweek 20 Current Events

Page 23 text:

 All eight of us finished within one second of each other—Whoosh—and the race was over. Who cares? The first place and gold medal isn't everything. You have to keep improving. Up wte 7 As Long As You're Improving, You're Winning The drive over to Bloomington from Columbus went quickly. As I pulled into the driveway of a sur- prisingly large range-style home, my heartbeat quickened. Stand- ing on the porch, I tried to reas- sure myself, He's just a person; forget about all the previous inter- views he's done with profes- sionals. I rang the bell. The door opened and I was greeted with a large smile and sharp blue eyes. Sitting in front of a crackling fire in the living room, I began to get a first-hand impression of all the trials which the Olympic track and field hopeful, Steve Heidenreich had come through. Early at Watertown High School in South Dakota, Steve possessed the qualities which separated a competitor from a winner; determination, desire and the undying spirit to succeed. Af- ter winning his first state meet, a record which still remains un- touched in South Dakota today, Steve separated himself from other competitors. As a college freshman, Steve became a varsity athlete and world class miler at Indiana Uni- versity. Breaking record after record in the midwest, Steve compiled one of the most amaz- ing winning streaks in the running world. Over a time period of just five weeks, Steve placed first in six conference meets, setting five new course records. Gazing at the full trophy case in the living room, the realization of what the tragic accident Steve en- countered must have meant to him became evident to me. Here he was, one of the top ten runners in the nation, an obvious favorite for the 1976 Olympic team, who one night was selfishly ripped from his lifetime dream. On March 17,1976, Steve was the vic- tim of a hit and run accident while training on Kinser Park. Doctors said Steve would not survive from the massive impact which crushed one side of his skull. But, after extensive surgery and weeks of flirting with death, Steve re- turned home that summer. When I left the hospital I've been told that I was mentally the equivalent to a two year old. I had to learn everything again, just like an infant. I drew a blank on the memory of trivial things. I didn't know what a desk was. I didn't know what curtains were. That summer at home in South Da- kota, I progressed up to my teens again. It was like I was reliving my life. Baffling the doctors and medi- cal books, Steve progressed rap- idly. That fall, Steve returned to I.U. to finish college. I was liter- ally a high school kid trying to complete the senior level of col- lege. I had to mature all over again. I learned and recalled ma- terial quickly-it was like review- ing for a test; the knowledge was there but it had to be jarred from my memory. Returning to his career, Steve also returned to running. Slowly at first, Steve completed ten minute Up Close miles, as he again devoted himself to the sport. I spent all my time either in class, studying, or run- ning. Yuck! (Laughter rises from us as Steve allows me to become as much a part of his remember- ing as his trophies.) Since his accident, Steve has ran his lifetime best 1500 meter time, once again ranking with the world class. Steve is still pushing forward, still striving for what he feels is capable. First place isn't everything. The race I ran in Czechoslovakia before my acci- dent was a great experience and a large turning point for me as an athlete. In one race I improved five seconds. All eight of us fin- ished within one second of each other—Whoosh!—and the race was over. Who cares? The first place and gold medal isn't every- thing. You have to keep improv- ing, as long as you're improving, you're winning. Fittingly, Steve is now em- ployed at Bloomington's YMCA where he teaches running and cross-country skiing to people who realize the importance of their body and their health. Steve emphasized, One should never stop running, because deteriora- tion is so quick. In two weeks one can ruin months of training by not running or exercising. Don't ever quit. Suddenly, as his eyes caught mine, I smiled. Steve didn't quit; he's still running. by Kim Russell and Personal of Steve Heidenreich 19



Page 25 text:

As the majority of the American public was preparing for a peace- ful Christmas celebration in De- cember, an angry group of young Iranian militants decided to take things into their own hands by seizing the United States embassy in Iran. Angered by the United States' support to their past leader, the Shah, who was in New York City to undergo surgery for cancer, the militants held the en- tire embassy captive for more than a week. After the initial inter- national shock, the militants re- leased all the women and blacks, but refused to release the adult white males. After his surgery, the Shah was transported to Mexico, where he then offered to return to Iran. But, by that point, the militants were too angered and uncontrolled to accept the trade. After sending all the Iranian natives living in the United States back to their mother country and calling on the United Nations for help, which failed, President Carter made his first real political move: an at- tempted rescue mission in early May. Caught in a sandstorm in the Iranian dessert, the helicopters were brought down before reach- ing their destination at the em- bassy. The mission failed terribly, killing eight Americans in the crash. Because of the attempted rescue, the Iranian militants pro- ceeded to scatter the hostages throughout Iran to insure against future such attempts. At the completion of this book, on june 2, 1980, all fifty hostages still remain prisoners of the mili- tants in Iran. On July 11, Richard Queen was treed by the Iranians because his illness baffled them. On July 15, doctors in Zurich announced he was suffering from multiple sclerosis. Iranian Militants Seize American Hostages Will We Survive the Roller-Coaster Ride? INFLATION, RECESSION and UNEMPLOYMENT: the three fast- est paces factors in the lifestyle of 1979-1980. As prices reached fig- ures never before considered by many of the American populace, unemployment grew and the phenomenon was labeled a re- cession, but more realistically appeared worse than the depres- sion of the 1930's. Due to a degree of inter- national frenzy, oil and fuel prices rose again and again. After stab- lizing for awhile between 70$- 75$per gallon, prices again took off. After crossing over that $1.00 a gallon mark, people prayed for stabilization, but none seemed to be in sight. For periods of time gas was rationed, to some only five gallons each time at the tank and to other only on odd and even days. As prices continued to hike, interstate signs read as high as $1.79 per gallon. Quickly, slo- gans began to pop up: The gas war is over, gas won. In one hectic week, the long surge in gold, silver and other precious metals was also thrown into chaos. With the increasingly troubled world economy, bullion traders across the globe went into a wild pay-any-price frenzy for the touch of these sacred metals. Precious metal ears, coins, jew- elry, trinkets, anything, metal was thrown into the dizziest roller- coaster ride in the memory of even the oldest trade profes- sionals. Prices touched levels that were inconceivable a few months before. Said a New York commodities expert, George Clarke, in a re- vealing if overwrought ex- planation of the market's extreme volatility and nervousness: In my opinion what is happening is that the world is looking at World War III. In a single day, gold climbed $74.50 per ounce more than twice its total value as late as 1971. Dur- ing the week, it climbed to the unthinkable value of $148, to hit $660 per ounce before slipping back to $603 by the end ot the week; an overall gain of 18 per- cent in only five days. Silver, which had climbed more sharply than gold during 1979, leaped by $7 per ounce, to a peak of $41.50 or a rise of twenty per- cent. Even at that figure, silver was trading for more than gold had been worth at the start of the 1970's. Other metals on the market also rocketed. Platinum, which is used in jewelry and manufac- turing of such products as jet en- gines and high octane gasoline, soared from $693 to a record of $870 per ounce before settling at $767. Titanium, which is used in the manufacturing of aircraft and was trading for as little as $3.98 per pound earlier in 1979, steadily climbed and sold for as much as $25 per pound. Even copper climbed nearly 10 percent and set a record of $1.11 per pound. Crisis come and go, affecting some in one area of our country and leaving others untouched; but the economic crisis of in- flation is one that touched all Americans, in every walk of life. Quotes from Time, Newsweek Current Events 21

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